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The Raspberry Pi is all about low-cost computing, which makes this particular hack quite fitting, as it allows you to make a terminal for your lil' Linux machine out of something you may already have at home: a Kindle Paperwhite. Displeased with the glare from his laptop's screen on a sunny day, Max Ogden was inspired to find something better and ended up with this Paperwhite hack. It builds on the original "Kindleberry Pi" method for the Kindle Keyboard, although Ogden had to massage it for the newer model and added some extra hardware to make the setup as wireless as possible. You wouldn't call the end result a monitor, as such -- the Paperwhite logs into an SSH session running on the Pi, so it "pretty much only works for terminals." That's probably for the best, as Ogden guesses the lag between wireless keyboard and e-ink screen is around 200ms, but at least it has portability, battery life and sunlight readability in the 'pros' column. Details of the project can be found at the source below, meaning only time (and probably, a few peripherals) stands between you and the ultimate hipster coffee shop machine.

Old habits can be hard to break, and while Amazon made the point pretty clear that it's shifted toward a world of touch controls on its devoted e-readers, the company hasn't completely abandoned the Kindle Keyboard. The reader formerly known as the Kindle 3 is still available on Amazon's page in its 3G form and will continue to be so, at least for the time being, at $139 for the Special Offers version and $189 without. An Amazon spokesperson told us that part of the justification for continuing the offering is the device's accessibility features.

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amazone booke bookse readere readerse-booke-bookse-readere-readerskindlekindle 3kindle keyboardKindle3KindleKeyboardThu, 06 Sep 2012 17:32:00 -040021|20318092http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/15/insert-coin-kapsule-lightstand-puts-your-kindle-keyboard-in-the/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget&ncid=rss_semi
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There are plenty of benefits to e-ink displays, they're clean, easy on the eyes, light on the battery draining and can be read in direct sunlight, unlike their LCD brethren. There are a number of downsides as well, of course, including the lack of backlighting, making them tough to read in a dark room. Several companies have attempted to capitalize on this shortcoming, with clip-on accessories that are sometimes awkward and unwieldy when attached to tiny e-readers. Though, for the record, some have managed to get things right, like Amazon's own Lighted Leather Cover for the fourth-gen Kindle.

Amazon has pushed out a new update for the Kindle 3, now operating under the alias of the Kindle Keyboard. This gives the well-buttoned e-reader access to some of the cloud features found on its freshly unboxed younger brother, and includes the ability to view any archived documents, notes and highlights you've added to that intangible pile of books and articles. You'll need to tether the Kindle to your PC, point your browser towards Amazon, and download the file corresponding to the right region and model. Excitable annotators can grab the upgrade now at the source link below.

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amazonamazon cloudAmazon KindleAmazon Kindle 3Amazon Kindle KeyboardAmazonCloudAmazonKindleAmazonKindle3AmazonKindleKeyboardbookscloudcloud computingcloud storageCloudComputingCloudStoragee booke bookse inke readere readerse-booke-bookse-readere-readersEBookEBooksEInkEReaderEReadersfeaturefeaturesfirmware updateFirmwareUpdateKeyboardkindlekindle 3kindle keyboardKindle3KindleKeyboardminipostreaderreadingSun, 16 Oct 2011 08:31:00 -040021|20082555http://www.engadget.com/2011/09/28/amazon-discounts-original-6-inch-kindle-keyboard-now-starting/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget&ncid=rss_semi
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Ready for another new Kindle moniker to remember? Here it comes! "Kindle Keyboard." That's the name that was bestowed upon the tried-and-true 6-incher today after Bezos unwrapped a touchscreen model and a low-cost variant that tout no physical QWERTY keys whatsoever. Now, the WiFi-only Kindle is going for as low as $99 with ads (down from $114), while the non-ads edition can be had for $139. Meanwhile, the 3G + WiFi Special Offers edition has fallen from $164 to $139, and the ad-free brother is going for $189. Naturally, all four of 'em are in stock and shipping today if the new blood just didn't do much for ya.